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OUTBACK SPIRIT: Inspiring true stories of Australia's unsung heroes By Sue Williams Outback people just get on with the job, with plenty of humour and little fuss. Although most Australians today live close to the coast and in the big cities, I like to think that we stay connected in some sense, real or spiritual, with the great red deserts, the bare brown lands dusted with mulga and Mitchell grass, and the people who've made the Outback their home. - Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce, Governor-General Five kids orphaned by a terrible accident; a struggling family living in the most isolated spot on earth; a single dad battling to cope in a house falling down around his ears; a desperately ill woman in the middle of nowhere. These are stories of ordinary people who, against seemingly insurmountable odds, help out those in need and who inhabit Australia's vast untamed frontiers. In the true Outback traditions of mateship, resilience and generosity no task is too great and no sacrifice too much for these everyday heroes. Cheryl flies sick patients from rural areas to emergency medical treatment in cities; Sue is often the only one between life and death for her patients in the Kimberley; Ricky trades city comforts to connect with kids through sport in remote communities while Eileen overcomes great challenges to protect remote land for generations to come. These are some of the characters who embody the spirit of the Outback - and all are available for interview. With a Foreword by Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce, Governor-General, 'Outback Spirit' recognises the enormous personal reserves these people draw on to maintain Outback values for the future of all Australians. Sue Williams is the author of eleven books, including the best-selling 'Women of the Outback'; 'Peter Ryan: The Inside Story'; 'Mean Streets', 'Kind Heart: The Father Chris Riley Story' as well as 'And Then The Darkness', about the disappearance of the British backpacker Peter Falconio, which was shortlisted for the prestigious Golden Dagger Award, the True Crime Book of the Year and the Ned Kelly Awards for Crime Writing. Unlike those in the Outback she loves, Sue lives in the most densely populated part of Australia, Sydney's Kings Cross. 'Outback Spirit' is available now.
OUTBACK SPIRIT: Inspiring true stories of Australia's unsung heroes By Sue Williams
Outback people just get on with the job, with plenty of humour and little fuss. Although most Australians today live close to the coast and in the big cities, I like to think that we stay connected in some sense, real or spiritual, with the great red deserts, the bare brown lands dusted with mulga and Mitchell grass, and the people who've made the Outback their home. - Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce, Governor-General
Five kids orphaned by a terrible accident; a struggling family living in the most isolated spot on earth; a single dad battling to cope in a house falling down around his ears; a desperately ill woman in the middle of nowhere.
These are stories of ordinary people who, against seemingly insurmountable odds, help out those in need and who inhabit Australia's vast untamed frontiers. In the true Outback traditions of mateship, resilience and generosity no task is too great and no sacrifice too much for these everyday heroes.
Cheryl flies sick patients from rural areas to emergency medical treatment in cities; Sue is often the only one between life and death for her patients in the Kimberley; Ricky trades city comforts to connect with kids through sport in remote communities while Eileen overcomes great challenges to protect remote land for generations to come. These are some of the characters who embody the spirit of the Outback - and all are available for interview.
With a Foreword by Her Excellency Ms Quentin Bryce, Governor-General, 'Outback Spirit' recognises the enormous personal reserves these people draw on to maintain Outback values for the future of all Australians.
Sue Williams is the author of eleven books, including the best-selling 'Women of the Outback'; 'Peter Ryan: The Inside Story'; 'Mean Streets', 'Kind Heart: The Father Chris Riley Story' as well as 'And Then The Darkness', about the disappearance of the British backpacker Peter Falconio, which was shortlisted for the prestigious Golden Dagger Award, the True Crime Book of the Year and the Ned Kelly Awards for Crime Writing. Unlike those in the Outback she loves, Sue lives in the most densely populated part of Australia, Sydney's Kings Cross.
'Outback Spirit' is available now.
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